Glad you gave Someone's Watching Me! a chance. I remember watching it on network TV back in 1978 with my parents when I was very young, and it left quite a mark on me. I think it's a strong suspense story with some interesting visuals and a great climax. I was thrilled when it finally came out on DVD a few years ago. IMO this is a film that deserves to be much more widely known.
Hello. Thank you for your reviews of these films. "A Quiet Place: Day One" is the only film that I saw from all of the other films that you reviewed. But the other films look rather interesting. I did see this third installment of a "A Quiet Place" in the theater and enjoyed it. It is sadder than the first two films. However, I did enjoy it. Like yourself, I like Part 2 more than Part 1. I wish you and your family a very safe and HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
Thank you for your recommendations . I agree with your opinion regarding On Dangerous Ground , I liked it quite a bit . I am looking forward to watching Beach Red and Siege at Pinchgut . As usual , your reviews are informative and entertaining . Cheers !
Just received a notification to check out your channel and very m uch enjoy this wonderful movie review!! Most of these classic cinematic gems I have never heard of except for the Killer That Stalked New York which may have once caught a clip on TMC when they were still turner Movie Classics!! Unfortunately today's films do not have the special qualities that made films of yesterday the endearing and timeless gems they have come to be!! God bless you and your family for these movie reviews are so wonderful to watch and learn more from a very lovely and professional youtuber!!! Have a wonderful thanksgiving and looking forward to your next video!!
Hi, JW! Fun video. I'm glad to hear you (and others) talking about 'Someone's Watching Me!'. I thought that was pretty great for a TV movie. I watched that a long time ago, I think because of a good review in one of Leonard Maltin's books, though it is not in there now, for some reason. I'll be watching for 'On Dangerous Ground.' Thanks once again for sharing your thoughts.
One of the UA-cam channels I watch says that a comment of seven words or more will drive the algorithm to suggest the channel to other viewers. I don't know if that's true for every UA-cam channel or not, but I'm going to comment anyway 😄 Yet another great bunch of movies to add to my list! Wishing you and your family a great Thanksgiving, Jerome. Once again, discovering you is one of the things I'm most thankful for 😊
Saw "Someone is Watching Me!" when it premiered waaaay back when, and quite enjoyed it. Good thoughts, as always. Noticed that since I subbed a few months ago, your total has gone from 15K to over 32K; congrats and Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family! You must have a higher tolerance for ads than I do. I would have given up on that film with the ad breaks and pop up messages. Of these, I've only seen On Dangerous Ground. Ida Lupino and Robert Ryan are two of my favorites. I just re-watched a personal favorite that stars Ryan: The Set-Up. It's centered on a boxing match but is about much more than that and looks like an Edward Hopper or Ash Can School painting. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on these films!
Thanks for the reviews. Lauren Hutton has 61 film credits according to IMDB, her last was 2018 "I Feel Pretty". Someone can correct me on this one, but she's probably best remembered for playing opposite Burt Reynolds in "Gator" (1976).
@@Weiselberry Thank you, I did have a lovely Thursday and I’m going to give the credit to you for wishing it lol. :) I hope you had a fantastic thanksgiving. I thought It best to wait until today to reply to your kind words so as not to disturb your thanksgiving day. Pesky UA-cam is right! it seems okay for now though I think, I spoke too soon because I’m having issues again with it. ~ Thank you Ms Weiselberry ~
Did you see the Star Trek short I shared a link to last week? It’s entirely possible that you may have been one of the first UA-camrs to be aware of it at the time because I didn’t see it mentioned elsewhere on the platform until two or three days later. UA-cam wouldn’t allow me to post this in my previous comment and it’s taken four attempts to get this to work, it’s not even important but my stubbornness wouldn’t let me stop until it worked lol.
@@bartolomeuomacduibheamhnad6855 Yes, I did see it! Sorry, I meant to tell you sooner that I'd watched it. There were a couple things about the implied story/timeline that confused me, but I loved it. Going into it I was skeptical, given some of the technology involved, but for once they gave us something really awesome and worthwhile, producing a send-off that I didn't know I was missing until I saw it. It made me cry. :)
Nice, concise reviews. I'm surprised by one. As a young child I loved WW2 films and when my dad took me to the local theatre to see a new on I was excited. So, as a seven year-old I sat in the dark watching "Beach Red." It terrified me. It seemed to my young self to be a bloodbath and the objective correlative seemed to be missing limbs, blown off in combat. Obviously, I was way too young for this but I guess in 1967 the ratings were not taken seriously. In high school there were a lot of kids freaked out by "The Exorcist" and Soylent Green, but "Beach Red" did a number on me.
Hi! I have been meaning to watch "On Dangerous Ground", and based on your review, I will seek it out. I have seen another Ida Lupino/Robert Ryan suspense film called " Beware, My Lovely", and it is quite good. She is a single woman and hires a handy man who unbeknownst to her is disturbed and violent. Robert Ryan was such an underrated actor! Even his villains had a humanity to them, which is definitely the case here. As usual, thanks for watching so many films so we don't have to!
Greetings! Good idea to break up the month's mini-reviews, considering you watch and review so many films. Funny that you mentioned that irritating YT movie; I didn't realize until now that your channel doesn't have those graphics floating around like so many others. It's refreshing, Hope you and yours have a really nice holiday, with awesome homemade food. (My apple pie is done and in the freezer, thank goodness.) Thanks J.
I loved A Quiet Place: Day One. The fact that our main character is already dying and knows it makes the movie so much more interesting. Nyong'o absolutely kills it.
Hey, Jerome. Here’s what I watched in November so far. 1. King Kong (1976) 2. The Jazz Singer (1980) 3. Flash Gordon (1980) 4. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990) 5. Mickey’s Christmas Carol 6. Aladdin (1992) 7. Rebecca (1940) 8. The Godfather: Part II 9. The Black Hole (1979) 10. Popeye (1980) 11. Heartbeeps I hope you and your family have a Happy Thanksgiving, J! 🦃🍁🍂🦉
Dear Ms Weiselberry, Another eclectic mix of movies! This month I've been deep into Noirvember with: "The Postman Always Rings Twice" (1946) "Double Indemnity" (1944) "Decoy" (1946) "House on Telegraph Hill" (1951) "Somewhere in the Night" (1946) "Road House" (1948) "Kiss of Death" (1947) "Street With No Name" (1948) "Phantom Lady" (1943) I tossed a couple Japanese jidaigeki in for variety: "Chushingura" (1962) "Samurai Assassin" (1965) Have a happy Thanksgiving!
The Library is a wonderful place to get movies that you have never seen or heard of. I just picked up The Three Musketeers starring Lana Turner and Gene Kelly.
The director of On Dangerous Ground, Nicholas Ray, is one of my favorites. He felt ill during the shoot and Ida Lupino directed while he was gone. Lupino is another director you’ve mentioned, The Hitchhiker, for example, but she directed many very good films. The Bigamist is another worth seeing. As for Herrmann’s score for ODG, he was so impressed with the solo violinist, he wanted to give her screen credit, but the studio said it was against Academy rules to give a player a solo credit, so he had her name added to his credit. One of the best crime films of its era with a marvelous Robert Ryan.
Libraries can be a great source for films, and many work in association with other libraries (mine connects with 43 libraries), so don't think you're just limited to what's in the building. If you haven't been in your local library in a while, stop in, get a card if you don't already have one, and see what's out there.
"Naked Prey" has an extremely uncomfortable beginning with the deaths of the arrogant white hunters at the "mercies" of the gleeful African tribe. Think "firing pottery".
I've been watching a lot of early Hitchcock this month. My favorite was Number Seventeen (on UA-cam). It's sloppy and confusing (and strangely slapstick at times), but I thought it was a lot of fun. Recommended.
Pinchgut Island got it's name from a convict who was sentenced to a week of bread and water in chains. Fort Denison was later bulit because of fear of a Russian attack during the Crimean War. Why the Russians would bother is anyone's guess. It's now open to visitors and you can do a National Parks guided tour of the tower.
"The Killer That Stalked New York" - Good movie. Have you ever seen "Panic in the Streets" by Elia Kazan. An even better version of "The Killer. . .". Lauren Hutton is also in the (very good) psycho-killer movie "Fear" (1990) with Ally Sheedy as the star. I really, really, truly LOVE "On Dangerous Ground". Robert Ryan (one of my favorites) and Ida Lupino are very good. This movie is great.
Yes, Bernard Herrmann does compose a sequence when Jim Wilson is driving through the mountains that Herrmann repeated verbatim in North by Northwest. And his music "Death Hunt" aka Scherzo for Horns is a fairly popular concert work today. ua-cam.com/video/p6PzMPm82xs/v-deo.htmlsi=wnbWr9GFdJgHLhvC I do want to see Someone's Watching Me. It looks like a pretty mature work for a young director. So thanks. Going to check that out.
A great selection of reviews, thank you. Laura Hutton made quite a lot of films from the '70s onwards about fifty in all, some were foreign films some made for TV, a couple which I recommend are: "American Gigolo" 1980 possibly her biggest part, and a documentary, "The Disappearance of My Mother" 2019.
john carpenter's Someone's Watching Me! yi seksenler sonu geceyarısı gerilim kuşağında seyretmiş ve beğenmiştim. ustanın çok bilinmeyen işlerinden. a quiet place 3'ü henüz izlemedim. ilk 2 film çok iyiydi ama bu filmdeki en büyük gerilim kediye bir şey olacakmı korkusu.
Solid reviews. Would you ever do a review of Salt of the Earth (1954)? It's a very good movie that I think would fit well in this channel. Also I'd recommend torrenting movies to get around the issues you dealt with in terms of advertising, censorship, etc.
Don't get me started about how they edit out derogatory terms they now consider offensive in movies. If that's the way its going to be, then lets just go back to the Hays Code.
I agree with you about "Someone's Watching Me", though for a different reason. It strikes me as the kind of story a writer can't do a lot with, to make his version distinctive in some way. Every example of a sub-genre like that is going to be like any other example. Ho hum. As a writer myself, it's not the kind of story I'd want to bother with. The other movies look interesting, though. I must check them out.
JW, love , love, love your reviews, but....I am stuck with older glasses waiting for new ones, and you really look blurry to me! You said something about....in a hushed tone...gray hair being the reason you didn't have an HD camera...well, I hate to say it but, even blurry with my old glasses...I can see them! :) so...with that out of the way...can you go to a newer camera , pretty please?
@illbebad My hair has actually never had anything to do with it; if I ever said something like that, it was a joke. I'm sorry the low resolution of my videos bothers you, but I have several reasons why I choose to record the way I do.
I had originally intended just to mention that the man on the left at 02:26 is Victor Maddern, very familiar face to someone like me who grew up in the UK in the 1970s, as he was a ubiquitous supporting actor in drama and comedy, film and TV, as well as featuring in one of the best out-takes ever, in the long-running BBC TV police series "Dixon of Dock Green" ua-cam.com/video/2_t9Mv3r-Fo/v-deo.html. All he had to say was "Dock Green Nick"! But then I looked up the film and saw that not only was it the last film produced by the famous Ealing Studios but it was directed by Harry Watt. He began in documentaries and directed the ground-breaking "Night Mail" about the overnight mail train from London to Scotland, with verse by W H Auden.
I really appreciate how well spoken you are. Thank you.
Thank *you*!
Glad you gave Someone's Watching Me! a chance. I remember watching it on network TV back in 1978 with my parents when I was very young, and it left quite a mark on me. I think it's a strong suspense story with some interesting visuals and a great climax. I was thrilled when it finally came out on DVD a few years ago. IMO this is a film that deserves to be much more widely known.
It’s a great film 😊
Can’t wait to see part two!
Another great (and slightly odd) mix of films. I always enjoy these episodes.
Happy Thanksgiving!
Hello. Thank you for your reviews of these films. "A Quiet Place: Day One" is the only film that I saw from all of the other films that you reviewed. But the other films look rather interesting. I did see this third installment of a "A Quiet Place" in the theater and enjoyed it. It is sadder than the first two films. However, I did enjoy it. Like yourself, I like Part 2 more than Part 1.
I wish you and your family a very safe and HAPPY THANKSGIVING!
Thank you for your recommendations .
I agree with your opinion regarding On Dangerous Ground , I liked it quite a bit .
I am looking forward to watching Beach Red and Siege at Pinchgut .
As usual , your reviews are informative and entertaining .
Cheers !
Thanks for seeing so many neat things!
Just received a notification to check out your channel and very m uch enjoy this wonderful movie review!! Most of these classic cinematic gems I have never heard of except for the Killer That Stalked New York which may have once caught a clip on TMC when they were still turner Movie Classics!! Unfortunately today's films do not have the special qualities that made films of yesterday the endearing and timeless gems they have come to be!! God bless you and your family for these movie reviews are so wonderful to watch and learn more from a very lovely and professional youtuber!!! Have a wonderful thanksgiving and looking forward to your next video!!
Thank you, and welcome to the channel! I'm so glad you enjoy the videos. :)
Have a great holiday! Thanks for your work. 🎉
I haven't seen any of these, so I'll look into them.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!
Great work once again!
Hi, JW! Fun video. I'm glad to hear you (and others) talking about 'Someone's Watching Me!'. I thought that was pretty great for a TV movie. I watched that a long time ago, I think because of a good review in one of Leonard Maltin's books, though it is not in there now, for some reason. I'll be watching for 'On Dangerous Ground.' Thanks once again for sharing your thoughts.
One of the UA-cam channels I watch says that a comment of seven words or more will drive the algorithm to suggest the channel to other viewers. I don't know if that's true for every UA-cam channel or not, but I'm going to comment anyway 😄 Yet another great bunch of movies to add to my list! Wishing you and your family a great Thanksgiving, Jerome. Once again, discovering you is one of the things I'm most thankful for 😊
Thank you, Joy! I'm so grateful to have you in my audience as well!
Thank you JW, have a great thanksgiving 👏😀
Saw "Someone is Watching Me!" when it premiered waaaay back when, and quite enjoyed it. Good thoughts, as always. Noticed that since I subbed a few months ago, your total has gone from 15K to over 32K; congrats and Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family!
You must have a higher tolerance for ads than I do. I would have given up on that film with the ad breaks and pop up messages.
Of these, I've only seen On Dangerous Ground. Ida Lupino and Robert Ryan are two of my favorites. I just re-watched a personal favorite that stars Ryan: The Set-Up. It's centered on a boxing match but is about much more than that and looks like an Edward Hopper or Ash Can School painting.
Thanks for sharing your thoughts on these films!
Haven’t seen these in a while thanks Jerome!
Great video! Good job
I am glad you mentioned public libraries. They are a treasure trove that, surprisingly, many people are unaware of.
Thanks for the reviews. Lauren Hutton has 61 film credits according to IMDB, her last was 2018 "I Feel Pretty". Someone can correct me on this one, but she's probably best remembered for playing opposite Burt Reynolds in "Gator" (1976).
thanks for sharing about these!
Happy thanksgiving to you and yours.
I think UA-cam may have been acting up on me again this week.
Oh no, I hope not. Pesky UA-cam. Thanks for the Thanksgiving wishes! I hope you have a lovely Thursday. :D
@@Weiselberry Thank you, I did have a lovely Thursday and I’m going to give the credit to you for wishing it lol. :) I hope you had a fantastic thanksgiving.
I thought It best to wait until today to reply to your kind words so as not to disturb your thanksgiving day.
Pesky UA-cam is right! it seems okay for now though I think, I spoke too soon because I’m having issues again with it.
~ Thank you Ms Weiselberry ~
Did you see the Star Trek short I shared a link to last week? It’s entirely possible that you may have been one of the first UA-camrs to be aware of it at the time because I didn’t see it mentioned elsewhere on the platform until two or three days later. UA-cam wouldn’t allow me to post this in my previous comment and it’s taken four attempts to get this to work, it’s not even important but my stubbornness wouldn’t let me stop until it worked lol.
@@bartolomeuomacduibheamhnad6855 Yes, I did see it! Sorry, I meant to tell you sooner that I'd watched it. There were a couple things about the implied story/timeline that confused me, but I loved it. Going into it I was skeptical, given some of the technology involved, but for once they gave us something really awesome and worthwhile, producing a send-off that I didn't know I was missing until I saw it. It made me cry. :)
Nice, concise reviews. I'm surprised by one. As a young child I loved WW2 films and when my dad took me to the local theatre to see a new on I was excited. So, as a seven year-old I sat in the dark watching "Beach Red." It terrified me. It seemed to my young self to be a bloodbath and the objective correlative seemed to be missing limbs, blown off in combat. Obviously, I was way too young for this but I guess in 1967 the ratings were not taken seriously. In high school there were a lot of kids freaked out by "The Exorcist" and Soylent Green, but "Beach Red" did a number on me.
Happy Thanksgiving to you and your family!
Thanks, Tom! Happy Thanksgiving!
Hi! I have been meaning to watch "On Dangerous Ground", and based on your review, I will seek it out. I have seen another Ida Lupino/Robert Ryan suspense film called " Beware, My Lovely", and it is quite good. She is a single woman and hires a handy man who unbeknownst to her is disturbed and violent. Robert Ryan was such an underrated actor! Even his villains had a humanity to them, which is definitely the case here. As usual, thanks for watching so many films so we don't have to!
Greetings! Good idea to break up the month's mini-reviews, considering you watch and review so many films. Funny that you mentioned that irritating YT movie; I didn't realize until now that your channel doesn't have those graphics floating around like so many others. It's refreshing, Hope you and yours have a really nice holiday, with awesome homemade food. (My apple pie is done and in the freezer, thank goodness.) Thanks J.
I loved A Quiet Place: Day One. The fact that our main character is already dying and knows it makes the movie so much more interesting. Nyong'o absolutely kills it.
Happy Thanksgiving👍!
Loved Killer that stalked New York
Hey, Jerome. Here’s what I watched in November so far.
1. King Kong (1976)
2. The Jazz Singer (1980)
3. Flash Gordon (1980)
4. Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (1990)
5. Mickey’s Christmas Carol
6. Aladdin (1992)
7. Rebecca (1940)
8. The Godfather: Part II
9. The Black Hole (1979)
10. Popeye (1980)
11. Heartbeeps
I hope you and your family have a Happy Thanksgiving, J! 🦃🍁🍂🦉
Dear Ms Weiselberry,
Another eclectic mix of movies! This month I've been deep into Noirvember with:
"The Postman Always Rings Twice" (1946)
"Double Indemnity" (1944)
"Decoy" (1946)
"House on Telegraph Hill" (1951)
"Somewhere in the Night" (1946)
"Road House" (1948)
"Kiss of Death" (1947)
"Street With No Name" (1948)
"Phantom Lady" (1943)
I tossed a couple Japanese jidaigeki in for variety:
"Chushingura" (1962)
"Samurai Assassin" (1965)
Have a happy Thanksgiving!
I really like "On Dangerous Ground." It's a short film, yet it takes its time to show why this police detective is world-weary.
The Library is a wonderful place to get movies that you have never seen or heard of. I just picked up The Three Musketeers starring Lana Turner and Gene Kelly.
When I see Lauren Hutton I still hear " They call it denial.." from that old commercial that I'm certain you've seen lol.
The director of On Dangerous Ground, Nicholas Ray, is one of my favorites. He felt ill during the shoot and Ida Lupino directed while he was gone. Lupino is another director you’ve mentioned, The Hitchhiker, for example, but she directed many very good films. The Bigamist is another worth seeing. As for Herrmann’s score for ODG, he was so impressed with the solo violinist, he wanted to give her screen credit, but the studio said it was against Academy rules to give a player a solo credit, so he had her name added to his credit. One of the best crime films of its era with a marvelous Robert Ryan.
Ida Lupino is the Queen!
The last movie was really good. Ida Lupino and Robert Ryan did a good job acting and selling this film.
11:31 More confident people would go check things out on their own. It took me years to be that comfortable but it does happen.
Every Thanksgiving as a kid, Laurel and Hardy's "March of the Wooden Soldiers" would be on TV. Would like to see a review of that sometime.
10:30 She also had a great talk show in the late 90's.
Gonna keep suggesting hoping you consider, I’d love for you to review the films of James Dean (East of Eden, Rebel Without A Cause, & Giant).
Nice video
Libraries can be a great source for films, and many work in association with other libraries (mine connects with 43 libraries), so don't think you're just limited to what's in the building. If you haven't been in your local library in a while, stop in, get a card if you don't already have one, and see what's out there.
@ramsien Interlibrary loans are a game-changer!
Cornell Wilde did two other movies I enjoyed. No Blade of Grass and The Naked Prey. Hope you have a happy Thanksgiving.
"Naked Prey" has an extremely uncomfortable beginning with the deaths of the arrogant white hunters at the "mercies" of the gleeful African tribe. Think "firing pottery".
Have you ever reviewed Metropolis 1927? Saw most of it but didn’t understand it fully.
No, I've seen it several times, but so far I haven't done a video on it. I'd like to, though!
@ I hope you do sometime, interesting movie.
Criterion Collection:
Hobson’s Choice (1954): Charles Laughton, Brenda De Banzie, John Mills.
I've been watching a lot of early Hitchcock this month. My favorite was Number Seventeen (on UA-cam). It's sloppy and confusing (and strangely slapstick at times), but I thought it was a lot of fun. Recommended.
Robert Ryan gets really heavy in the bar scene. "Why do they make me do it"?
Pinchgut Island got it's name from a convict who was sentenced to a week of bread and water in chains. Fort Denison was later bulit because of fear of a Russian attack during the Crimean War. Why the Russians would bother is anyone's guess. It's now open to visitors and you can do a National Parks guided tour of the tower.
Have you seen Theodora Goes Wild (1936) with Irene Dunne? If not, hope you check it out.
"The Killer That Stalked New York" - Good movie. Have you ever seen "Panic in the Streets" by Elia Kazan. An even better version of "The Killer. . .". Lauren Hutton is also in the (very good) psycho-killer movie "Fear" (1990) with Ally Sheedy as the star. I really, really, truly LOVE "On Dangerous Ground". Robert Ryan (one of my favorites) and Ida Lupino are very good. This movie is great.
@reader1956 Yes, I've seen Panic on the Streets a couple times. Solid movie, and I agree it's the superior of the two.
Cornell directed two other films. No Blade of Grass x The Naked Prey. Both worth seeking out!
Yes, Bernard Herrmann does compose a sequence when Jim Wilson is driving through the mountains that Herrmann repeated verbatim in North by Northwest. And his music "Death Hunt" aka Scherzo for Horns is a fairly popular concert work today.
ua-cam.com/video/p6PzMPm82xs/v-deo.htmlsi=wnbWr9GFdJgHLhvC
I do want to see Someone's Watching Me. It looks like a pretty mature work for a young director. So thanks. Going to check that out.
I know Jerome has an Alien: Romulus review coming up soon!
Bet you a dollar she doesn't. :D
My favorite b movies 1 them 1954 2 night of the living dead 3 tarantula movie 😊
A great selection of reviews, thank you. Laura Hutton made quite a lot of films from the '70s onwards about fifty in all, some were foreign films some made for TV, a couple which I recommend are: "American Gigolo" 1980 possibly her biggest part, and a documentary, "The Disappearance of My Mother" 2019.
john carpenter's Someone's Watching Me! yi seksenler sonu geceyarısı gerilim kuşağında seyretmiş ve beğenmiştim. ustanın çok bilinmeyen işlerinden. a quiet place 3'ü henüz izlemedim. ilk 2 film çok iyiydi ama bu filmdeki en büyük gerilim kediye bir şey olacakmı korkusu.
i dont watch a movie until you have reviewed
Please watch the platform
I like you. You are obviously smart/brilliant.
Solid reviews. Would you ever do a review of Salt of the Earth (1954)? It's a very good movie that I think would fit well in this channel. Also I'd recommend torrenting movies to get around the issues you dealt with in terms of advertising, censorship, etc.
Don't get me started about how they edit out derogatory terms they now consider offensive in movies. If that's the way its going to be, then lets just go back to the Hays Code.
Loving you ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
I agree with you about "Someone's Watching Me", though for a different reason. It strikes me as the kind of story a writer can't do a lot with, to make his version distinctive in some way. Every example of a sub-genre like that is going to be like any other example. Ho hum. As a writer myself, it's not the kind of story I'd want to bother with. The other movies look interesting, though. I must check them out.
Do you own THE PSYCHOTRONIC ENCYCLOPEDIA OF FILM?
No, I don't.
JW, love , love, love your reviews, but....I am stuck with older glasses waiting for new ones, and you really look blurry to me! You said something about....in a hushed tone...gray hair being the reason you didn't have an HD camera...well, I hate to say it but, even blurry with my old glasses...I can see them! :) so...with that out of the way...can you go to a newer camera , pretty please?
@illbebad My hair has actually never had anything to do with it; if I ever said something like that, it was a joke. I'm sorry the low resolution of my videos bothers you, but I have several reasons why I choose to record the way I do.
All I can say is that the resolution has always looked fine to me!
@@davidriegler9170 are you using your phone? Guessing it would matter much less on a phone
Yes, I use a phone. I may be the last person in the country who doesn't have a computer.😢
Girl still lives in 1980s
I had originally intended just to mention that the man on the left at 02:26 is Victor Maddern, very familiar face to someone like me who grew up in the UK in the 1970s, as he was a ubiquitous supporting actor in drama and comedy, film and TV, as well as featuring in one of the best out-takes ever, in the long-running BBC TV police series "Dixon of Dock Green" ua-cam.com/video/2_t9Mv3r-Fo/v-deo.html. All he had to say was "Dock Green Nick"! But then I looked up the film and saw that not only was it the last film produced by the famous Ealing Studios but it was directed by Harry Watt. He began in documentaries and directed the ground-breaking "Night Mail" about the overnight mail train from London to Scotland, with verse by W H Auden.
Lauren Hutton is good in Timestalkers [1987].